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Original Research Communication |
1 From Unité 476, Human Nutrition and Lipids, INSERM (National Institute of Health and Medical Research), and Laboratoire de Chimie Analytique, Faculté de Pharmacie, Université de Méditerrannée, Marseille, France.
Background: The process of intestinal absorption and chylomicron resecretion of dietary cholesterol in humans is poorly understood.
Objective: The present study aimed to test the hypothesis that dietary cholesterol ingested during a given meal is resecreted into chylomicrons (and plasma) during several subsequent postprandial periods.
Design: Seven healthy subjects ingested 3 comparable mixed test meals (at 0, 8, and 24 h) containing a given amount of fat (49 g) and cholesterol (157 mg); blood samples were taken 3 and 6 h after each test meal and 48 and 72 h after the beginning of the experiment. Heptadeuterated dietary cholesterol was present in the first test meal only, enabling its specific determination with use of gas chromatographymass spectrometry. Chylomicrons, LDL, and HDL were isolated and lipids were quantified.
Results: In apolipoprotein B-48containing chylomicrons, deuterated cholesterol concentrations were moderate after the first meal (1.3 x 104 mmol/L), reached a maximum after the second meal (2.4 x 104 mmol/L), and were still elevated after the third meal (1.7 x 104 mmol/L). In plasma, LDL and HDL cholesterol enrichment in deuterated cholesterol was lower than in chylomicrons and plateaued after 2448 h. Estimates of newly secreted exogenous deuterated cholesterol in chylomicrons indicate that 30.7%, 55.2%, and 14.1% of the total was secreted after the first, second, and third meals, respectively.
Conclusion: Ingested dietary cholesterol is secreted by the small intestine in chylomicrons into the circulation during
3 subsequent postprandial periods in healthy humans. This likely results from a complex multistep intestinal processing of cholesterol with dietary fat as a driving force.
Key Words: Lipid digestion absorption chylomicron postprandial metabolism men heptadeuterated cholesterol
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